Discourse, Discourse Analysis and C.D.A
1.- Discourse in linguistics
studies speech patterns and the use of the language
"discourse"
Structured collections of meaningful texts.
Produced and interpreted by specific people
Institutional and social contexts.
''text"
Material accessible to others.
Speech, spoken or written, is manifested
Production and interpretation
Cognitive processes related to social practices.
2.- Foucauldian discourse
A.D.C.
Roots in Foucault and other schools of thought
Fairclough
employs the term discourse in a Foucauldian sense
investigated the exercise of social power through discourses.
constituted in the organization and distribution of knowledge
approach is anti-humanist
is based on objects, style, concepts and themes
constructed through dispersion and discontinuity.
3.- Discourse formations
''discourse formations''
(what can and should be said)
Sub- related to the "discursive practice".
constitution of meaning and of the subject.
4.- Discourse as Social Practice (Fairclough)
"happy ambiguity" = discourse
It refers to a real representation as well as a social convention.
facilitating and limiting
manifests
the close examination of interpersonal meaning and in its emphasis on the subject position of language users.
active agent as passively conformed,
two considerations
social identities of the interactants
social relationships
5.- Resources for production and interpretation
It grants specific social identities and power relations.
textual and contextual characteristics
Interpretation through the dialectical interaction of the keys and the MRs.
MRs serve as interpretative procedures
''intertextual context''
The participants of the discourses operate on the basis of assumptions.
6.- Intertextual context
interpretations
common
of the intertextual context
to which series a text belongs
same or different interpretations
constructing an "ideal reader'' through presupposition.
7.- Tendencies in discourse change
Integration between social institutions in modern capitalist society.
Increasing tendency to the formation of subjects.
Through strategic and manipulative discourses.
Presents the interests of the dominant bloc as the interests of the population as a whole.
Encompasses aspects of life independent of production.
Synthetic personalization
mass communications media
Advertisements
Magazine articles
Brochures
Cover headlines, etc.
8.- Discourse Analysis
Describe activities in the interaction of disciplines
such as
sociolinguistics
psycholinguistics
philosophical linguistics
computational linguistics
Focus on language
The senders construct linguistic messages for the receivers.
Receivers work on the linguistic messages to interpret them.
Semiotic construction: meanings about semiotic systems
Word construction: situated meanings about reality.
Construction of activity: situated meanings about which activity.
Construction of socioculturally situated identities and relations: situated meanings about which identities and relations are relevant to interaction.
Political construction: constructing the nature and relevance of various "social goods''
Connection building: assumptions about how the past and future of an interaction are connected to the present.
9.- A Historical Overview
Analysts study language in use.
in use
Written texts of all kinds and spoken data.
Dealt with the analysis of single sentences.
Speech act theory and the formulation of conversational maxims.
British discourse analysis influenced by M.A.K.'s functional approach to language.
important in
Britain Sinclair
Coulthard (1975)
Brimingham University
Developed a model
description of teacher-student speech
based
On a hierarchy of discourse units.
Structural-linguistic criteria
Text grammarians perceive texts as linguistic elements.
American discourse analysis,
ethnomethodological tradition
Examines types of speech acts
storytelling
greeting rituals
verbal duels
10.- Approaches to Discourse Analysis
Speech Act Theory
It is concerned
What people do with language and functions of language.
Some authors mention that is:
John Austin y John Searle
Meaning and action are related to language.
Taxonomy of speech acts according to Searle
Representative (asserting)
Directives (requesting)
Commissives ( promising)
Expressives (thanking)
declarations ( appointing)
Labov y Fanshel
Accurately identify the intended meaning of the speaker's utterance and respond to it accordingly.
Pragmatics
Detailed study of meaning in the language
Studies words and the meaning of sentences
It deals with three concepts
Meaning
Context
Communication
Morris
Defines it as
The science of the relation of signs to their interpreters
Identifies three ways of studying signs
Syntax
Study of formal relations of signs to one another
Semantics
Study of how signs are related to the object to which they are applicable
Pragmatics
Study of the relation signs to interpreter
Interactional Sociolinguistics
Gives an approach to discourse that focuses upon situated meaning
It studies the relationship between language and society, in the context of verbal interaction.
Schiffrin
states that is
The discourse as a social interaction and negotiation of meaning in the use of language
Ethnography of Communication
Speech based on anthropology and linguistics.
For hymes
Analyzes patterns of communication as part of cultural knowledge and behavior
It consists of four elements
linguistic competence
social appropriateness
psycholinguistic limitations
observing actual language use
Variation Analysis
Sociolinguistic variables that influence language in different contexts.
They are discovered through the systematic investigation of a speech community.
Related with
Social factors
Cultural factors
Contextual factors
For labov
they are alternative ways of saying the same thing.
Conversation Analysis
by sociologist
Harold Garfinkel.
He developed the approach
ethnomethodology
Ethnomethodology: the link between what social actors ‘do’ in interaction and what they ‘know’ about interaction.
Analyzes social order and seeks to discover the methods by which members of a society produce a sense of social order (conversation).
11.2.- The Model of the Present Study
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS
Social Events
• Examining text chains or networks
• Framing within social practices
• Identifying the social even
Genre
• Genre influences
• Mix of genres
• Genre chain
Intertextuality
• Direct and indirect reporting
• Attribution of voices
• Inclusion and exclusion of other texts/voices
Assumptions
• Ideological assumption
• Existential, prepositional, and value assumptions
Semantic/ Grammatical Relations between Sentences and Clause
• Grammatical relations between clauses
• Higher-level semantic relations
• Predominant semantic relations
Exchanges, Speech Functions and Grammatical Mood
•Metaphorical relations
• Types of statements
• Predominant types of exchange and speech function
Discourses
•features characterizing the drawn discourses
• Mixing of discourses
• Discourses drawn upon
Representation of Social Events
• Representation of social events
• Grammatical metaphor
• Representation of processes
Styles
• Features characterizing the drawn styles
• Mixing of styles
• Styles drawn upon
Modality
• Categorical and modalized modalities
• Deontic modalities
• Epistemic modalities
Evaluation
• Influence of Fairclough's model: Mentioning that this research follows the models of Fairclough (1989) more closely for analyzing the corpus data from women's magazines, but acknowledging that C.D.A. is not restricted to any one particular model and encompasses various interrelated aspects
• Values commitment
• Justification of analyses
Discourse Practice
Each of the three dimensions of discourse practice is represented below.
Interdiscursivity
• Identify discourse types and justify interpretations through text analysis.
• Characterize the sample overall in terms of genre and its implications for production, distribution, and consumption.
• Determine if the sample draws upon multiple genres.
Intertextual Chains
The objective here is to specify the distribution of a
(type of) discourse sample by describing the intertextual chains it enters into, that is the series of text types it is transformed into or out of (see Fairclough 1992b: 130-2).
Coherence
The analysis considers the heterogeneity and ambivalence of the text for specific interpreters and the inferential work required.
Conditions of Discourse Practice:
• The aim is to specify the social practices of text production and consumption related to the type of discourse represented by the sample.
• The analysis explores whether the text is produced or consumed individually or collectively, and if there are distinguishable stages of production
Manifest Intertextuality
situated between discourse practice and text, raises questions about the elements involved in producing a text. It focuses on the features that are evident or "manifest" on the surface of the text.
Discourse Representation
• What is represented aspects of context and style, or just ideational meaning?
• Is the represented discourse clearly demarcated? Is it translated into the voice of the representing discourse?
• How is it contextualized in the representing discourse?
Presupposition
• Are they linked to the prior texts of others, or the prior texts of the text producer?
• Are they sincere or manipulative?
Text
Interactional Control
The objective is to describe the larger-scale organizational properties of interactions that contribute to the orderly functioning and control of interactions
• Exploring topic control: Examining how topics are introduced, developed, and established, and whether topic control is symmetrical or asymmetrical.
• Investigating agenda setting: Understanding how agendas are set, policed, and evaluated by participants.
Cohesion
The objective is to show how clauses and sentences are connected together in the text.
Ethos
Ethos involves not just discourse, but the whole body. Any of the analytical categories listed here maybe relevant to ethos (Fairclough 1992b: 166-7).
Grammar
Three dimensions of the grammar of the clause are differentiated here: ‘transitivity’, ‘theme’ and ‘modality’
Wording
The objective is to contrast the ways meanings are worded with the
ways they are worded in other (types of) text and to identify the interpretative perspective that underlies this wording (Fairclough 1992b: 190-4).
Metaphor
The objective is to analyze and characterize the metaphors employed in the discourse sample, comparing them to metaphors used elsewhere to convey similar meanings. The analysis aims to determine the factors, such as cultural or ideological influences, that shape the selection of metaphors
Social Practice
Ideological and Political Effects of Discourse
Orders of Discourse
Social Matrix of Discourse
11.1.- Fairclough’s Approach to C.D.A.
Fairclough (1989)
Critical linguistic work
Variety of textual examples
Analyzed to illustrate the field
Aims and methods
Relation to power and ideology developed
Disclosing the discursive nature
Contemporary social and cultural change
Language of the mass media
Scrutinized as a site of power
Of struggle
Site where language is apparently transparent
Discourse
Social Practice
Part of society
Somehow external
Conditioned process,
(non-linguistic)
Approach
Fulfill the objectives
Research project
Fairclough’s models
Three - Dimensional Model
(text, discursive practice, social practice)
Three dimensions
Stages
Critical discourse analysis
Description:
Stage which is concerned with formal properties of the text.
Features of vocabulary
Grammar
Punctuation
Turn-taking
Types of speech act and the directness or indirectness of their expression
descriptive framework
Ten main questions
(and some sub-questions)
asked of a text
find the set of textual features
most significant for critical analysis:
A. Vocabulary
B. Grammar
C. Textual structures
The significance and interest of each of these questions are explained by Fairclough (2001c:94-l 16) in details.
Interpretation:
Concerned with the relationship between text and interaction.
Text and social structure
Indirect, mediated one.
Discourse
Textual features
Produced and interpreted
Become real
Socially operative
Embedded
Social interaction
Background of commonsense assumptions
(Part of members resources)
Point of view
Formal features
Activate elements
Members resources
Dialectical interplay
Generate interpretations
Situational context
Questions which relate to four main dimensions of situation:
1. What is going on?
2. Who is involved?
3. In what relations?
4. What is the role of language?
1. Context:
What interpretation(s) are participants giving to the situational and intertextual contexts?
2. Discourse type(s):
What discourse type(s) are being drawn upon (hence what rules, systems or principles of phonology
3. Difference and change:
Are answers to questions 1 and 2 different for different participants? And do they change during the course of the interaction?
Explanation:
Concerned with the relationship between interaction and social context.
Portray discourse
Part of a social process
Social practice
Showing how
Social structures
Reproductive effects
Structures, sustaining them or changing
Social determinations
Members resources
Struggles
(Ideally, naturalized)
Societal level
Institutional level
Situational level
Determinants
Effects
Stages
Three questions
1. Social determinants:
What power relations at situational, institutional and societal levels help shape this discourse?
2. Ideologies:
What elements of members’ resources which are drawn upon have an ideological character?
3. Effects:
How is this discourse positioned in relation to struggles at the situational, institutional and societal level?
11.- Critical Discourse Analysis
The model of C.D.A.
lie in classical rhetoric
text linguistics and sociolinguistics
Sociological variables
The notions of power
Ideology
Hierarchy
Gender together
Critical theory of language
Social practice.
Specific historical contexts
How is the text positioned or what is its positioning?
Whose interests are served by this positioning?
Whose interests are negated?
What are the consequences of this positioning?
Studies from three overlapping intellectual traditions
"Treat social practices in terms of their implications for things like status, solidarity, distribution of social goods, and power”.
Treated equally
Analyses of language are inherently critical
Explores the social interaction which is manifested in linguistic forms
Effected by and effects the discursive practices
Social institutions and social structures
discourse affect ideologies
Responsible for power relations
Is a type of discourse analytical research
Social power
Societal issues
Abuse
Dominance and inequality are enacted
Reproduced and resisted by text and talk in the social and political context, van Dijk (2003)
Critical theory
“the words of white men engaged in conversations with themselves” (Yancy, 1998)
Critical race theory
Post-structuralism
Post-modernism
Neo-colonial studies
Queer theory and so on
Is not a unified set of perspectives
Transforms:
Economy
Education,
Race
Reproduce
Class
Sexual orientation construct
Gender
Transform social systems
Religion
Power and justice ways
Post-structuralism
intellectual movement with which Michel Foucault
Rejection of the structuralist movement
Earlier 20th century
Across disciplines
Economy (Marx)
Language (Saussure)
Psychology (Freud)
Anthropology specifically
Culture and kinship relations (Levi-Strauss)
Foucault’s (1969/1972) concept of discourse and power has been important in the development of C.D.A
Fairclough and Wodak (1997: 271-80):
1. Critical discourse analysis addresses social problems.
2. Power relations are discursive.
3. Discourse constitutes society and culture.
4. Discourse does ideological work.
5. Discourse is historical.
6. The link between text and society is mediated.
7. Discourse analysis is interpretative and explanatory.
8. Discourse is a form of social action